Turkey wants a dialogue with France over disputed antiquities in Louvre

Posted By Matthew On November 23, 2012 @ 2:01 pm In Similar cases | 4 Comments

For some months now, Turkey has been increasing their efforts to retrieve disputed artefacts[1] held by foreign museums. Now, their Culture Minister Ertugrul Gunay is requesting a dialogue with the Louvre over the return of various artefacts held by the French Museum.

PARIS (AFP).- Turkey wants to start a “dialogue” with French authorities for the return of tiles and other antiquities on display at the Louvre museum in Paris, Culture Minister Ertugrul Gunay said Thursday.

Saying the artefacts “were stolen at the end of the 19th century”, Gunay said: “We want talks to start between French authorities and the board controlling Turkish museums to work on the issue and take stock.

“The theft had nothing to do with the Louvre or with a French citizen who could have acquired them in good faith,” he said, adding that Ankara had launched moves to “recover objects representing cultural heritage which were illegally taken out of Turkey”.

The contested pieces include tiles from a historic Ottoman mosque in Istanbul.

The tiles are part of a 12-metre- (40-foot-) long mosaic put together by the Louvre and one of the highlights of a new wing of Islamic art which was launched at the end of October.

Turkey’s Radikal newspaper said they were “stolen” from the Piyale Pasha mosque designed by Ottoman imperial architect Mimar Sinan for the vizier and grand admiral Piyale Mehmed Pasha and built between 1565 and 1573.

Louvre authorities have said the pieces used in the mosaic were either donated and bought between 1871 and 1940, “In conditions that were perfectly legal and in line with the rules of the time”.

Turkey has also long been seeking the return of tiles taken from the 16th-century tomb of Sultan Selim II in Istanbul but former culture minister Frederic Mitterrand rejected the demand.

Louvre’s new wing of Islamic art showcases about 3,000 precious works dating from the seventh to the 19th centuries. pcm/ach/gk